When it’s time for you to enter into any corporate or say any professional field, your experiences do count! And it counts a lot!
If someone refers you to the words that I’m just going to mention don’t get offended …it’s just that you need to gain some more experience in your field! So that none could refer you back to such names.

Meaning: a person who is new to or inexperienced at a particular activity.
Let me tell you the history of this word “GREEN HORN”. When a calf is born, the cute little horns it has are green in color. New born calf is inexperienced as well new to everything around.
(Originally an animal with green (that is, young) horns): A person who is new into something and can be easily tricked. In ancient history, the young Ox were called greenhorns as they were green and their horns hadn’t matured. Gilbert K. Chesterton says, “The greenhorn is the ultimate victor in everything; it is he that gets the most out of life.)
The greenhorn lacked the skills he would need to live in the hard rough country.
Lack of experience caused the greenhorn to miss several shots during his first game.Of course, even a greenhorn could follow the wagon tracks they would leave in the sand.

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Meaning: a beginner or novice.

If you are the new guy at the job and you’re wearing a big dorky badge that says “Trainee” on it, you are a tyro. We have all been tyros at some point, but it doesn’t necessarily prevent us from hazing the new kid, the next-generation tyro. Tyro can also be used as an adjective to describe someone new to a particular scene — such as “the tyro congressman” or “the tyro quarterback.”
My friend Sam completed his graduation and was looking for a job , in every interview he was answered that he is a tyro and was rejected.
Because I am a tyro at English, I often mispronounce words native speakers of English have no problem with.

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Meaning: (of a person or action) showing a lack of experience, wisdom, or judgement. Or (of a person) natural and unaffected; innocent.
To call people naive (nah-EEV’) is to imply that they have not learned the ways of the world, and are therefore idealistic and trusting beyond the point of safety; such idealism and trust have probably come from ignorance or inexperience. ·
He checked himself, fearing to seem naive, yet he felt an irresistible desire to show his friend as soon as possible that he was now a quite different, and better, Pierre than he had been in Petersburg.
Was he mocking her, or did he think she was naive enough to believe his outrageous flattery?